Group 1
Improve your Arpeggios in Two Weeks with Evan Taucher!
Arpeggios are a fundamental part of guitar technique, but are you practicing them in a way where you will improve over time? Oftentimes we find ourselves stuck in the same routine with old habits that leave our arpeggios sounding imprecise and strained. Join this intensive to break out of the box and work on our arpeggios in a precise way that will challenge your mind, and then your fingers.
- Course Period: October 17th - 28th
- Optional check-In via Zoom: October 24th, 10 am PST
Assignment Video for Week 1
Please follow along and share a video of yourself with the exercises Evan is presenting in his video! Scores of Villa-Lobos Prelude no.4 and Giuliani op.48 no.5 attached!
Week 1 video submissions should include one or more of the following:
- preparation exercise with metronome on, playing one note per click
- accent exercise with metronome, cycling through accenting different fingers
IMSLP273551-PMLP444038-HVL-Preludes-Eschig Kopie
IMSLP26384-PMLP58657-Giuliani_Esercizio_Op48
IMSLP273547-PMLP224198-HVL-Estudos-Eschig1953 (1)
The assignment Video for Week 2 will be shared after the Zoom Session on October 24th!
Assignment Video for Week 2
Week 2 submissions should include one or more of the following:
- pluck and relax exercise
- pimiaimi arpeggio
- pmimamim arpeggio
- pamamaia arpeggio
- a repertoire example (Giuliani Etude 5 op.48 or Prelude 4 arpeggios by Villa Lobos)
-
Hi, Iām glad to join this session. Iāve been practicing Giuliani exercises for a long time, but without any feedback. Also working on Bach Prelude in D from the Cello suite 1, with mixed results.
Question on the first exercise. The preparation rules I have read say that all fingers should be placed in advance on an upward arpeggio. Is that advice just for beginners. I can see that would be impractical in actual musical context.
-
Hello Evan, thank you for the introduction, the āinstructionsā and scores.
Here is my first practice with exercises 1 and 2 (in 1 video) and next I tried the HVL study#1 with i and m accents (only the opening bars) . Maybe you can comment on this. I noticed (seeing my self, playing and watching concentrated is confusing) that with this last exercise I didnāt do full preparation. I practice it slower, but it feels unnatural to play this study with continuous preparation. In prelude 4 (not in the video) however, I do use preparation in the arpeggio part all along - feels more natural as itās just p i m a all the timeā¦.
-
joosje - I've just had the chance to watch your videos. Great job! I'll give you a bit of feedback below
In your first video (arpeggio ex), you're doing a great job preparing and you're doing it rhythmically very precise. Great work there. Watch out for you p finger not always preparing on the 4th string after your a finger plays (or for that matter, whenever p is 'next up'. You started the exercise out by preparing your p finger perfectly but once accents got involved the p finger got a little lost. Let me know if that makes sense.
In the HVL video (and regarding your explanation your wrote in text) - you're playing this piece well, but I'd encourage you to take it at maybe 25% of the tempo you're playing it at in order to work on the preparation and feeling the preparation. Like you said, it feels a lot more unnatural when it's not just pima like the previous exercise. But as the old adage goes - 'if it were easy, everyone would do it'. Keep up the good work and I look forward to seeing your progress. Let me know if you have any more questions!
-
Dear friends,
Please find the link for the TWI Check-In with Evan Taucher here: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/88165370223
The Check-In is Monday, October 24th at 10am PST.
See you tomorrow!
Martin
-
Evan Taucher Hi Evan, i post here my videos ...I have keep it very simple , just with a E chord.....
First exercise is for finger preparation , second one is arpeggio pima estressing diferent fingers with two spreeds and third one is argeggio pimami with estressing the diferent fingers.
Thanks in advance for your feedback.....IĀ“ll try to join to the live session tomorrow
-
I practice a staccato arpeggio exercise regularly. I felt my hand was pretty well balanced. But the shifting accent made me realize my i finger is pretty weak.
It is still taking me a lot of concentration to perform the accent and the preparation on a piece I don't know. I feel my awareness shifting between chord, accent and preparation
-
Find the recording of he Zoom Check-In here: https://youtu.be/iVYpg_fPN84
-
cant thank you enough, Evan, for this intensive. Itās a great exercise. I send this second week impression of practice on the excerpt of VL prelude 4 (few measures with shifting accents)
analyzing myself I see the preparation is working but the bouncing back of fingers attacking can be better (trying to concentrate on both seems too big a step ) Looking forward to hearing your advice. Iām definitely planning to send an update later.
-
Thanks to everybody for your active participation! I happily forward a message from Evan to all of you!
Hi all,
It was incredible to work with each of you the past few weeks. Your progress, determination, and inquisitiveness inspired me!
Thanks for all of your efforts, and itās been great getting to know you. Please keep in touch if thereās anything you need - www.evantaucher.com
Best wishes, and I hope to see you soon!
Evan
Best wishes and get ready for our next TWI with TY!